Documenting and materialising art: conceptual approaches of documentation for the materialisation of art information
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A focus on documentation is essential to help better understand art and its information, particularly in terms of art’s materiality and art information’s materialisation. Documentation — that is, documents and practices with them, or so-called documentary practices — provides the material basis for art and, in turn, materialises the information presented, displayed or intended by the artwork, or piece of art.
Indeed, most kinds of art exist as some kind of document, such as a film, painting or sculpture. Art’s information, moreover, is materialised, and thereby transformed, into an artwork, or piece of art, by and through documentation. Documentation is therefore a crucial component of the field and practice of art because of its important roles in materialising artistic concepts into particular kinds of documents that are considered, treated, practiced and interacted with as art.
This article presents a conceptual exploration of documentation so as to help illuminate its importance for art’s materiality and art information’s materialisation. Drawing upon the work of Ann-Sophie Lehmann, Michael Buckland, Bernd Frohmann, Marc Kosciejew, Niels Lund, Tim Gorichanaz, and Kiersten Latham, Diana Coole and Samantha Frost, this article aims to introduce and begin to bring together the disciplines and practices of documentation and art by providing useful conceptual approaches in which to better understand their material realities. This article also responds to Ann-Sophie Lehmann’s call for more and greater material literacy of and for the (art) world, by contributing to the start of a conversation about documentation and materialisation generally and about art and its information specifically.
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Marc Kosciejew, University of Malta
Dr. Marc Kosciejew is a Lecturer and former Head of Department of Library, Information and Archive Sciences at the University of Malta. He has been published in scholarly and professional journals and newspapers, has lectured in Europe and North America, and has researched and presented worldwide. In 2016/2017 he was appointed by Malta’s Minister for Education and Employment to serve as Chairperson of the Malta Libraries Council (MLC), a government appointed council stipulated in the Malta Libraries Act, 2011, to provide strategic advice to the National Library, public library system, and the national Minister responsible for libraries. In 2016, he lectured at the Tate Modern in London, UK, on documentation science and materiality as part of the New Materialism Training School, Research Genealogies and Material Practices (COST Action IS1307). In 2007, he conducted research in North Korea (Democratic People’sSimilar Articles
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